Canine testicular tumors: Epidemiologic features of 410 dogs
- 15 October 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 18 (4) , 482-487
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.2910180413
Abstract
Histologically confirmed testicular tumors were diagnosed in 410 dogs from 12 North American veterinary university hospitals and clinics. Three tumor-cell types, Sertoli cell tumor, interstitial cell tumor and seminoma, were about equally represented. Several breeds were identified with high risk for different testicular tumor-cell types. Cytogenetic and immunogenetic studies of these dog families could offer leads applicable to familial testicular cancer in man. The multiplicity of breeds within the series suggests that, as in man, other factors, in addition to heredity, play a role in etiology. Cryptorchid dogs appear to have a 13.6 times higher risk of testicular tumor than normal dogs. Additionally, male dogs with an inguinal hernia have an increased risk (4.7) of testis tumors. There were no detectable excesses of other urogenital anomalies or urogenital tumors among the series. The Shetland Sheepdog is suggested as an appropriate model for research into the mechanisms responsible for testicular maldescent and tumorigenesis.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cryptorchidism, Hernia, and Cancer of the Testis 2 3JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1976
- Cryptorchism and related defects in dogs: Epidemiologic comparisons with manTeratology, 1975
- Occurrence of nervous‐tissue tumors in cattle, horses, cats and dogsInternational Journal of Cancer, 1975
- Testicular tumors.Epidemiologic, etiologic, and pathologic featuresCancer, 1973
- Social epidemiology of cancer of the testisCancer, 1972
- On the conditional moments of the k-statistics for the Poisson distributionBiometrika, 1970
- Rural preponderance of seminoma of the testisCancer, 1969
- A DOUBLING OF MORBIDITY FROM TESTIS CARCINOMA IN COPENHAGEN, 1943–1962Acta Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica, 1968